Good News - January 2020
INSIGHT 20 JANUARY 2020 www.goodnewsfl.org Good News • South Florida Edition See Pg. 8 Many organizations I consult for are facing the same struggle. They’ve hit a wall and can’t figure out how to move forward, grow and suc- cessfully scale in their current context. Much of the time the barrier is the same: they’re still oper- ating in the old paradigm where the secular is separate and unequal to the sacred. Theologi- cally that’s simply not the case. We must be dili- gent about removing the veil between the sacred and the secular, and acknowledge that all of life is sacred space. Foundational to successfully operate in this new freedom requires that everyone can fully ac- knowledge and embrace the priesthood of all be- lievers. The Greek word for “clergy” is non-exclusive. In fact, it’s the opposite, encom- passing all who believe and – without exception – is comprised of the whole people of God. Exodus 19:6 explains why we have been called out of darkness, “You will be for me a king- dom of priests and a holy nation…” As Jesus is about to leave earth, he imparts the ancient mission framed in a fresh paradigm: “I no longer call you servants, for a servant does not know his master’s busi- ness. Instead I have called you friends. Everything I have learned from my Father I have made known to you” (John 15:15 NIV). We are included in this fresh impartation of the mission. Our current dispensa- tion is that the Kingdom is here but not yet fully realized. Spirit-empowered Jesus came so we could shed the Old Testament’s view of priesthood as elitist and exclusionary, and embrace the priesthood of every believer, equipped to engage ministry in every sphere of life. Jesus endowed us with a Spirit-em- powered identity that offsets the old cultural practices of religion. We can now boldly declare that we are one people of God no longer bound by the divisive nature of the secular vs. sacred debate. Take Daniel, for example. He was secularly employed and a power player in God’s economy. The Spirit breaks out not only for a few special people or partic- ular tasks – but on all of God’s people to collectively accomplish Kingdom tasks. While we are each differently gifted, we are all called, and all have the Holy Spirit’s power. “But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you. And you will be my witnesses, telling people about me everywhere—in Jerusalem, throughout Judea, in Samaria, and to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8 NLT) I love my friend Bobby Gruenewald’s story. His day job was Internet startups and on Sunday he was a volunteer keyboard player. The executive pastor of his church saw an article in the local paper after the sale of one of Bobby’s compa- nies and invited him to lunch with a proposal that Bobby come on staff at the church. At first Bobby resisted, but, “Eventually my passion for the Church eclipsed my passion for business, and I joined the staff in 2001.” Seven years later, Bobby and his team made history when they launched YouVersion. It’s all sacred when we are liberated to operate in the fullness of our calling, truly em- bracing the priesthood of man. Agents of purpose When Jesus left earth, He didn’t leave us with a truncated Gospel; it is so much more than a personal salvific invitation. Accepting Christ bids us enter into His com- munity, join the Kingdom of God and play our part in His comprehensive mission. To be the Church today is to affirm the truth of God’s story by celebrating it, inter- preting it, then enacting it in our contemporary world. The job of the Church is to summon all people to believe and act. Every believer is invited into the Kingdom of God as an agent of purpose. It’s an invitation out of institutional, religious and preservation ecclesiology to a new and reformed mis- sionary ecclesiology. Salvation is the first in a series of steps into a new life. Stepping into our sacred calling of being a holy nation, a priesthood of believers, doesn’t mean that only those who have dedicated our lives to a church or ministry vocation are living out a sacred calling. Modern-day missiology looks less like Christians living counter-culturally within society and more like living out what James Davison Hunter calls, “…the faith- ful presence of God [as] the means to support their mission in every sphere of cre- ation.” Whether employed by a Christian NPO or a for-profit investment firm, the truth is we are all doing the work of the Church. Rob Hoskins is the President of OneHope. Since taking leadership of OneHope in 2004 he has continued to advance the vision of God’s Word. Every Child by part- nering with local churches to help reach more than 1.5 BILLION children and youth worldwide with a contextualized presentation of God’s Word. [1] https://www.charismamag.com/spirit/church-ministry/19204-lifechurch-tv- leader-bobby-gruenewald-talks-church-innovation-in-a-digital-age [2] Hunter, James Davison To Change theWorld: The Irony, Tragedy, and Pos- sibility of Christianity in the Late Modern World Theology of Work - Rob Hoskins - OneHope President
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